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kludge and around
3. v. To use a kludge to get around a problem.
This entry notes kluge, which is now often spelled kludge, " was the original spelling, reported around computers as far back as the mid-1950s and, at that time, used exclusively of hardware kluges ".

kludge and is
A kludge ( or kluge ) is a workaround, a quick-and-dirty solution, a clumsy, inelegant, difficult to extend, hard to maintain yet effective and quick solution to a problem, and a rough synonym to the terms " jury rig ", " Jugaad " or " jerry rig ".
The word ' kludge ' is ... derived from the German adjective klug, originally meaning ' smart ' or ' witty '.... ' Kludge ' eventually came to mean ' not so smart '.
The word " kludge " is, according to Burling, derived from the same root as the German " klug " ( Dutch kloog, Swedish Klag, Danish Klog, Gothic Klaugen, Lettish Kladnis and Sanskrit Veklaunn ), originally meaning " smart " or " witty ".
The Jargon File ( a. k. a. The New Hacker's Dictionary ), which is a glossary of internet slang maintained by Eric S. Raymond, differentiates kludge from kluge and cites usage examples predating 1962.
Other suggested folk etymologies or backronyms for kludge or kluge is from klumsy, lame, ugly, dumb, but good enough, or klutzy, lashup, under, going, engineering.
In modern computing terminology, a kludge ( or often a " hack ") is a solution to a problem, doing a task, or fixing a system that is inefficient, inelegant, or even unfathomable, but which nevertheless ( more or less ) works.
A kludge is often used to change the behavior of a system after it is finished, without having to make fundamental changes.
Sometimes the kludge is introduced in order to keep backwards compatibility, but often it is simply introduced because the kludge is an easier alternative.
A kludge is often used to fix an unanticipated problem in an earlier kludge ; this is essentially a kind of cruft.
Something might be a kludge if it fails in corner cases, but this is a less common sense as such situations are not expected to come up in typical usage.
More commonly, a kludge is a poorly working heuristic which was expected to work well.
An intimate knowledge of the context ( i. e., problem domain and / or the kludge's execution environment ) is typically required to build a corner case kludge.

kludge and bug
A variation on this use of kludge is evasion of an unknown problem or bug in a computer program.
Rather than continue to struggle to find out exactly what is causing the bug and how to fix it, the programmer may hack the problem by the simple kludge of writing new code which compensates.

kludge and by
Rat bikes are motorcycles that have fallen apart over time but been kept on the road and maintained for little or no cost by employing kludge fixes.
From version 1. 2 it was replaced by a kludge in words of the author.

kludge and on
Part of the firmware was held on an external 16 kB ROM cartridge ( also known as the " kludge " or " dongle "), until the QL was redesigned to accommodate the necessary 48 kB of ROM internally, instead of the 32 kB initially specified.
The internal implementation of long file names in VFAT is largely considered to be a kludge, but it removed the important length restriction, and allowed files to have a mix of upper case and lower case letters, on machines that would not run Windows NT well.
An early example of the term was in 1984, when early production Sinclair QLs were shipped with part of the QL firmware held on an external 16 KB ROM cartridge ( infamously known as the " kludge " or " dongle "), until the QL was redesigned to increase the internal ROM capacity from 32 to 48 KB.
Color QuickDraw, introduced in 1987, was a tremendous kludge on top of the original black and white QuickDraw.
Although this is the only way to implement auto-start functionality on pre-Windows XP systems, it could be considered a kludge, and the extra drive letter created can be an annoyance.

kludge and proper
This technique of code injection is considered less robust than proper code modification, and is often called a kludge or hack.

kludge and .
Eric S. Raymond has called it an " important hackerism " alongside kludge and cruft.
The present word has alternate spellings ( kludge and kluge ) and pronunciations ( and, rhyming with fudge and stooge respectively ), and several proposed etymologies.
The Oxford English Dictionary ( 2nd ed., 1989 ) kludge entry cites one source for this word's earliest recorded usage, definition, and etymology: Jackson W. Granholm's 1962 " How to Design a Kludge " article, which appeared in the American computer magazine Datamation.
kludge () Also kluge.
According to Burling, the word " kludge " first appeared in the English language in the early fifteen-hundreds.
Today " kludge " forms one of the most beloved words in design terminology, and it stands ready for handy application to the work of anyone who gins up 110-volt circuitry to plug into the 220 VAC source.
This Jargon File entry notes kludge apparently derives via British military slang from Scots kludge or kludgie meaning " a common toilet ", and became confused with U. S. kluge during or after World War II.
After Granholm's 1962 " How to Design a Kludge " article popularized the kluge variant kludge, both were interchangeably used and confused.
Many younger U. S. hackers pronounce the word as / klooj / but spell it, incorrectly for its meaning and pronunciation, as ' kludge '.

around and something
Waddell muttered something about taking a look around and climbed up to the flying bridge.
Otherwise, special care must be taken to branch around them so that the program will not attempt to execute something in a data area as an instruction.
As she reached Dave and felt his arm go around her, felt him pull her to the safety of his person, she knew with the certainty of despair that something bad had happened to Lauren.
And there is also something intangible that hovers around the table.
Linda accepted the reproach, which was something she did rarely in all her life and most rarely in that summer of 1936 when she was by all odds the prettiest and brightest young woman west of the Allegheny Mountains, and John was surely one of the handsomer and brighter young men around Pittsburgh.
It is an outer locative case, used just as the adessive and allative cases to denote both being on top of something and " being around the place " ( as opposed to the inner locative case, the elative, which means " from out of " or " from the inside of ").
There came something more: strength and serenity, a wonderful new assurance about life, a fresh perception of myself in the world around me.
Kidd and his men attacked the French island of Mariegalante, destroyed the only town, and looted the area, gathering for themselves something around 2, 000 pounds Sterling.
As she complied, Mucklow observed Cooper tying something around his waist.
" Hercules, the image, became to the revolutionaries, something to rally around.
In the complex model system, there were scram switches located at numerous places around the room that could be thrown if something undesirable was about to occur, such as a train going full-bore at an obstruction.
More importantly, the incontrovertible discovery of celestial bodies orbiting something other than the Earth dealt a serious blow to the then-accepted Ptolemaic world system, or the geocentric theory in which everything orbits around the Earth.
More importantly, the discovery of celestial bodies orbiting something other than the Earth dealt a blow to the then-accepted Ptolemaic world system, which held that the Earth was at the center of the universe and all other celestial bodies revolved around it.
In September 1923 he successfully applied to the Office of Customs to become a government-inspector of rubber plantations, a job that involved a great amount of traveling around the country, something he enjoyed.
However around 750 BC, or a little later, there was a migration of sea-going merchants from his original home in Cyme in Asia Minor to Cumae in Campania ( a colony they shared with Euboeans ), and possibly his move west had something to do with that, since Euboea is not far from Boetia, where he eventually established himself and his family.
Using the reflective glass that had become something of a trademark for him, Pei organized the facade around a series of boxed X shapes.
Pytheas also speaks of the waters around Thule and of those places where land properly speaking no longer exists, nor sea nor air, but a mixture of these things, like a " marine lung ", in which it is said that earth and water and all things are in suspension as if this something was a link between all these elements, on which one can neither walk nor sail.
Perimeter is the distance around a two dimensional shape, or the measurement of the distance around something ; the length of the boundary.
2 a: a popular belief or tradition that has grown up around something or someone ; especially: one embodying the ideals and institutions of a society or segment of society.
However, around 1750, something different was happening in Paris.
When something is dissolved, molecules of the solvent arrange themselves around molecules of the solute.
Powell then said there was " the Hispanic factor ": " If we could gather together all the anxieties for the future which in Britain cluster around race relations ... and then attribute them, translated into Hispanic terms, to the Americans, we would have something of the phobias which haunt the United States and addressed itself to the aftermath of the Falklands campaign ".
He eventually became something more of a romantic hero around the 18th century, when his popularity provoked the Harlequinade.

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